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Looking beyond the results - what's sitting behind international surveys? Lessons for teaching

Explore the PIAAC survey and its domains of literacy, numeracy, and problem-solving in technology-rich environments. Understand the characteristics and complexities of literacy and numeracy frameworks, and learn strategies to improve teaching in these areas.

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Looking beyond the results - what's sitting behind international surveys? Lessons for teaching

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  1. Looking beyond the results - what's sitting behind international surveys? Lessons for teaching Jan Hagston, Multifangled jan@multifangled.com.au

  2. PIAAC: an overview • The Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies • is an international survey of adults 16-64 years of age • will measure the domains of • literacy (reading) • numeracy • problem solving in technology-rich environments • through two modes of administration • paper and pen • computer • will allow comparison with the results of the Adult Literacy and Life Skills Survey • literacy also includes the components of reading • gas been administered in OECD and partner countries (including Australia) in the last year.

  3. Literacy definition Literacy is understanding, evaluating, using, and engagingwith written texts to participate in society, to achieve one’s goals, and to develop one’s knowledge and potential.

  4. Literacy Framework characteristics • Medium – print and digital • Format – continuous and non-continuous • Text type – argumentation, description, exposition, instruction, narration, records • Physical layout & features of digital texts • Social contexts – work, personal, community, education • Task aspects - access & identify, integrate and interpret, evaluate and reflect • Reading components - word meaning, sentence processing and passage comprehension

  5. Numeracy definition Numeracy is the ability to access, use, interpret, and communicate mathematical information and ideas, in order to engage in and manage the mathematical demands of a range of situations in adult life.

  6. Numerate behaviour involves managing a situation or solving a problem… • 1. in a real context: • - everyday life; - work; - societal; - further learning • 2. by responding: • - identify, locate or access • - act upon, use: order, count, estimate, compute, measure, model • - interpret • - evaluate / analyse • - communicate Numeracy Framework characteristics

  7. 3. to mathematical content/ information/ ideas: • - quantity & number • - dimension & shape • - pattern, relationships, change • - data & chance • 4. represented in multiple ways: • - objects & pictures • - numbers & mathematical symbols • - formulae • - diagrams & maps, graphs, tables • - texts • - technology-based displays Numeracy Framework characteristics

  8. A text ...

  9. A text / task

  10. A task or three Use the text to answer the questions: • How long is the Plan for the Samsung Galaxy S II? • How much would you pay per month for the HTCOneV? • Are there any benefits in the Samsung S III special offer above the others? http://www.telecom.co.nz/home/

  11. A task or three Discuss, with your neighbours • What did you do in order to answer the questions? • What reading skills and processes did you use to answer the questions? • What mathematical skills and processes did you need to use to answer the questions? • What, in terms of maths and reading, made some questions more difficult (or would have made them more difficult for a student)?

  12. The processes in solving a real life problem

  13. Transparency of information • Degree of complexity in making inferences • Semantic and syntactic complexity (more concrete the information & less complex the grammatical structure the easier ) • Amount of information needed • Prominence of information • Competing information • Text features READING - Factors that affect task difficulty

  14. The Numeracy Complexity Scheme

  15. How does this impact on literacy teaching? • Ensure tasks and activities cover the range of social contexts and text types • Create tasks that cover the range of cognitive operations - access & identify, integrate and interpret, evaluate and reflect • Teach students how to “read” the a task or question • Help students develop strategies to access and identify information, integrate and interpret (relate parts of texts to each other), evaluate and reflect (draw on knowledge, ideas and values external to the text)

  16. You are a literacy and language teacher too! Teach students how to “read” the text, and the task or question Ensure tasks and activities cover the range of social contexts Create tasks that cover the range of cognitive operations and content areas – including the Complexity of mathematical information/answer required; Type of operation/skill and Expected number of operations Create your own problems (use elements from the scheme to develop different levels of items) – start each lesson with a problem based within the content area you are currently teaching How does this impact on numeracy teaching?

  17. Questions

  18. References Australian Bureau of Statistics, (2007) Adult Literacy and Life Skills Survey: Summary results, Australia (cat. no. 4228.0), Australian Bureau of Statistics, Canberra Coulombe, Serge; Tramblay, Jean-Francois & Marchand, Sylvie, (2004) Literacy scores, human capital and growth across fourteen OECD countries, Statistics Canada, Ottawa Desjardins, Richard; Murray, Scott; Clermont, Yvan & Werquin, Patrick(2005) Learning a living: First results of the Adult Literacy and Lifeskills Survey, Statistics Canada, Ottawa (downloadable through the Statistics Canada Website at: http://www.statcan.ca/bsolc/english/bsolc?catno=89-603-XWE) Gal I, Alatorre S, Close S, Evans J, Johansen L, Maguire T, Manly M & Tout D. 2009. PIAAC Numeracy: A Conceptual Framework, OECD Education Working Papers, No. 35, OECD Publishing. http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/220337421165 Jones S, Gabrielsen E, Hagston J, Linnakylä P, Megherbi H, Sabatini J, DeutschesTröster, M & Vidal-Abarca E. 2009. PIAAC Literacy: A Conceptual Framework, OECD Education Working Papers, No. 34, OECD Publishing. http://www.oecd.org/officialdocuments/displaydocumentpdf?cote=edu/wkp(2009)13&doclanguage=en Hagston, Jan, (2002) Exploring the International Adult Literacy Survey data: Implications for Australian research and policy, Language Australia, Melbourne OECD (2012) Literacy, Numeracy and Problem Solving in Technology-Rich Environments: Frameworks for the OECD Survey of Adult Skills, OECD Publishing Sabitini, J. P. & Bruce, K. M, (2009), “PIAAC Reading Components: A Conceptual Framework”, OECD Eductaion Working Papers, No. 33, OECD Publishing. T. Scott Murray, Yvan Clermont and Marilyn Binkley, International Adult Literacy Survey. Measuring Adult Literacy and Life Skills: New Frameworks for Assessment, Statistics Canada, Ottawa

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